Australia central bank cuts rates to historic low of 2.25%

Analysts expecting possible additional cut to 2% at next policy meeting

The move was partly aimed at offsetting painful price declines for many of Australia’s resource exports which are hurting both company profits and mining investment.
The move was partly aimed at offsetting painful price declines for many of Australia’s resource exports which are hurting both company profits and mining investment.

Australia’s central bank has cut its cash rate to an all-time low of 2.25 per cent , breaking an 18-month hiatus on stimulus as it seeks to spur a sluggish economy while keeping downward pressure on the local dollar.

The currency duly sank more than a full US cent after the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) ended its first policy meeting of the year by announcing the quarter point cut.

"Overall, the Bank's assessment is that output growth will probably remain a little below trend for somewhat longer, and the rate of unemployment peak a little higher, than earlier expected," RBA governor Glenn Stevens said in a brief statement.

“This action is expected to add some further support to demand, so as to foster sustainable growth and inflation outcomes consistent with the target.”

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Markets had been leaning toward a cut this week, though only 9 of 29 analysts in a Reuters poll had tipped a move.

Interbank futures jumped on the news while pricing in a near 50-50 probability of a further move to 2 per cent at the next policy meeting in March.

Yields on 10-year government debt had already been trading below the cash rate and dropped further to a record low of 2.36 per cent, while Australian stocks hit their highest since 2008.

It was the RBA’s first easing since August 2013 and marked a sharp turnaround from its previous meeting in December when it had signalled a period of stability for policy.

The move was partly aimed at offsetting painful price declines for many of Australia’s resource exports which are hurting both company profits and mining investment.

The situation has been made all the tougher by a protracted slowdown in China, Australia’s biggest export market.

The move was given extra urgency by the recent rush to ease by other central banks, which meant the RBA had to follow suit if only to stop its currency from rising to uncompetitive levels.

The outlook for domestic inflation had also moderated as petrol prices plunged and wage growth stayed stuck at decade lows. Core inflation is now expected to hold near the floor of the RBA’s 2-3 per cent target band for much of this year.

An added wrinkle is political uncertainty as speculation swirls around the future of prime minister Tony Abbott.

A bruising voter backlash in state elections and a slump in his personal approval ratings has sparked chatter of a party revolt against his leadership.

Reuters